Tag Archives: Decoration Day

What Were Their Names? The “Memory” in Memorial Day

The year rolls around and our lives wend on, and Memorial Day has come again – even on May 30, as so many of us remember from our long-ago youths. In many ways, with school almost over, it seemed like the opening of summer. But of course it was, and is, so much more.
Caton’s a small town, but it took the lead once the Civil War was over, before even “Decoration Day” was solidly established. Caton created the first Civil War memorial in Steuben County. It’s an obelisk (popular in America at the time) and a cenotaph – a memorial for those buried elsewhere. And on it, they carved the names of their fellows who were never coming home.
Statues soon took the place of obelisks, and granite Union soldiers still stand guard over Corning, Hornell, Hammondsport, Painted Post, North Cohocton, and Bath. There are also Civil War memorials at Bath National Cemetery (another obelisk), and at Bath’s Nondaga Cemetery – not to mention smaller plaques and “all wars” monuments, and maybe even some stained-glass windows in churches.
Following “the Great War,” Frederick Carder created a striking glass memorial with the names of Corning’s dead – including his own son. It’s now at Corning City Hall, facing Market Street. It replaced an earlier list installed on the clock tower.
Grand Army of the Republic (Union veterans) had named their posts for fallen comrades – now American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars posts followed suit. There were also “architectural” war memorials – Bath municipal building, a library and a stadium in Corning.
During World War II many communities created displays listing their residents in the service – with gold stars added for those who died in the line of duty. After the war some of these were preserved, often little-noticed, until 21 year-old Maya Lin’s design for the Vietnam Memorial was unveiled, to public uproar. Her plan was a 500-foot wall of reflective stone, bearing the names of the American dead – now over 58,000.
Bigots, of course, screeched at the notion of an ASIAN-American designing a U.S. monument, but mostly people were just bewildered. Everyone, of course, was familiar with statues of horseborne generals, waving swords and delighting pigeons. But what in the world was this? How could we ever “honor” the dead with a goofy avant-guard creation?
The governing commission, though rattled, stuck to its guns, and compromised by adding a few discretely-placed traditional statues. When the monument opened, visitors were staggered. To walk down 500 feet of nothing but 60,000 names made an experience far beyond what anyone expected. No tugging of heartstrings, no sounds, no images, just the names. Even people who had no direct connection at all burst into tears.
We came to recognize the impact and importance of the NAMES. Each one was a person, an individual. Each one was given his or her name by delighted parents, seconds after they drew their first breath. Each name was called by friends – C’mon Johnny, Guido, Sharif! Their names were read when they graduated from high school. They’re still whispered in the privacy of darkened bedrooms.
Bath, Hammondsport, Cohocton, and Prattsburgh have created their own “name” monuments, some going back to the Revolutionary War. Hammondsport Central School exhibits the names and the photos of its fallen alumni. Many communities now have street banners with the names and photos of veterans. “At the going down of the sun, and in the morning, we will remember them,” Laurence Binyon wrote in 1914. “What were their names, tell me what were their names,” sang Woody Guthrie in 1941. “Did you have a friend on the good Reuben James?”
Every war at some point passes from living memory, and all at once those names are “only” names on a list, or names cut in stone. That’s why we have memorials. Why we have Memorial Day.

Forgotten (or Repurposed) Holidays

A week or so back I had to call a town office in my home state of Rhode Island, but wound up leaving a recorded message, because I’d forgotten it was V-J Day.

That may perplex some people, and stir vague memories for others. It’s the anniversary of Victory over Japan, and Rhode Island is now the only state where it’s still an official observance (second Monday in August, rather than the historical August 14). It’s a curious little holiday, late in a seaside summer. It used to be widely celebrated, but faded with memory of the war, pushed along no doubt by proximity to Labor Day.

Another holiday from my youth is Lincoln’s Birthday (February 12), which itself was overshadowed by Washington’s Birthday, ten days later. This meant two days off school in two weeks, possibly plus snow days as a bonus. George has long had an official national holiday but Abe hasn’t, and some places cram them together as “Presidents’ Day,” but eight states still celebrate Lincoln. This incudes New York, which I have somehow managed to miss in 25 years of living here. I speculate that it’s limited to closing government offices.

Thanksgiving goes back to a proclamation by Lincoln more clearly than it goes back to the Pilgrims, but Franklin D. Roosevelt shaped our modern celebration. It was traditionally the last Thursday in November, and also traditionally kicked off the Christmas shopping season. Some years November has five Thursdays, and the last one comes pretty late, so during the Depression FDR proclaimed it the FOURTH Thursday, to stimulate an extra week of retail business.

New Englanders and Republicans furiously celebrated on the fifth Thursday, and a mini-cartoon in the Bing Crosby movie “Holiday Inn” showed a confused turkey running back and forth between the two dates on a calendar. We’re all used to it now.

November has a second holiday, formerly called Armistice Day, celebrating the 11th day of the 11th month, when World War I ended. As memory faded, and as 17 million Americans went into uniform for the SECOND World War, this became Veterans’ Day, to honor all those who served.

Much to the exasperation of Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. (combat veteran and P.O.W.), who said “Armistice Day was a hallowed anniversary because it was supposed to protect future life from future wars. Veterans Day, instead, celebrates ‘heroes’ and encourages others to dream of playing the hero themselves, covering themselves in valor.”

Memorial Day started out as Decoration Day, to place flowers on the graves of the Union dead from the Civil War. (Waterloo claims the honor of initiating the holiday.) Former Confederate states fiercely ignored it, but… once again… as memory faded, and as two world wars brought hundreds of thousands of deaths, the day became Memorial Day for ALL the dead, and moved to the last Monday in May.

Believe it or not, the “Pennsylvania Dutch” used to be the about only Americans who paid any particular attention to Christmas, and even into the 20th century it was a normal work day for many people. Even as a gift-giving holiday, it had to compete with New Year’s.

Columbus Day has rightly come into scorn for celebrating a guy who, whatever his virtues, initiated an age of horror, with bigotry, imperialism, mass murder, and enslavement, all on scales such as the world had never seen. But holidays and statues, however much they purport to be about the past, are mostly about the times in which they are created. Columbus Day proclaimed the acceptance (at last!) of Italian-Americans (and by extension, other “new immigrant” groups) as full-fledged members of the American community. Maybe we should change it to Marconi Day.